Los Angeles Times

Rams beat L.A. rival

- gary.klein@latimes.com Twitter: @latimeskle­in

with one intercepti­on. He connected with receiver Robert Woods for two touchdowns and with receiver Cooper Kupp for another.

“In the first half he was completing about 90% of his passes,” Chargers coach Anthony Lynn said.

Lynn was close: Goff was actually 21 for 25 in the first half, which is 84%.

So go ahead, keep calling him a system quarterbac­k.

Goff said this week that he did not mind the tag as long as the Rams were scoring 30 points and winning.

They did that again, in a game that featured Todd Gurley rushing for 105 yards and a touchdown, the Rams blocking a punt for a touchdown, and a depleted defense that rose to the occasion in the fourth quarter to stave off a potential comeback. But Goff led the way

“He’s not a system quarterbac­k, right?” coach Sean McVay said with sarcasm.

Rivers displayed all the hallmarks that could make him a Hall of Famer. The 15th-year pro passed for 226 yards and two touchdowns, including a beautiful 42-yard strike to Mike Williams. He also showed the veteran pocket presence that Atlanta quarterbac­k Matt Ryan used to beat the Rams in a wild-card playoff game last season.

Goff, in this third season, is starting to do the same.

“I’ve always kind of had it,” he said, citing the progressio­n he made in high school, and then in college. Now he’s doing it as a pro.

“Starting to get more comfortabl­e, and as time goes on I will continue to get more comfortabl­e and better,” he said.

Goff kept his feet moving, scrambling for a long gain in the first quarter to keep alive a drive that he capped with a three-yard touchdown pass to Woods.

Early in the third quarter, he moved in the pocket, eluded a sack and delivered a pass down the right sideline to Kupp, who shed Chargers cornerback Trevor Williams on his way to a 53yard

touchdown.

But Goff is mainly turning heads with his passes.

Last season, his first running McVay’s offense, Goff was connecting with a lot of wide-open receivers. This season the windows have become smaller, but Goff seems to be delivering the ball with more velocity, and his receivers are consistent­ly making difficult catches on balls expertly

placed out of defenders’ reach.

“I’m getting more comfortabl­e with anticipati­ng stuff and anticipati­ng windows,” Goff said, adding, “That just happens as you grow and get better.”

Said Woods, who caught 10 passes for 104 yards: “He’s putting it right in a catchable spot every single time.”

Goff is still making occasional mistakes. In the second

quarter, Chargers rookie safety Derwin James picked off a pass in the end zone, but the Rams showed again that they can win with all three phases.

James returned the intercepti­on out of the end zone and went out of bounds at the Chargers’ one-yard line. On fourth down, Rams middle linebacker Cory Littleton burst through the middle and blocked a punt that safety Blake Countess recovered for a touchdown and a 21-6 lead.

The defense’s streak of six scoreless quarters ended on Rivers’ first touchdown pass to Mike Williams late in the first quarter. But in the fourth quarter, with Peters and Talib in the locker room because of lower-leg injuries, the Rams forced the Chargers to settle for a field goal instead of a touchdown that might have pulled them within eight points.

When the Rams got the ball with 4:40 left, Goff engineered a drive that ran out the clock.

About 30 minutes later, when his postgame news conference ended, a barefoot Goff retired to a locker room that was full of teammates splayed on the f loor or massage tables. They were receiving immediate treatment for the short turnaround necessary for a Thursday night game against Minnesota. Goff took his place, face down on a table, for a massage.

“I feel good right now and I feel confident,” Goff said. “Got the Vikings in four days so got to get ready.”

 ?? Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times ?? CORY LITTLETON blocks the punt of the Chargers’ Drew Kaser in the end zone, where Blake Countess recovered the ball for a second-quarter touchdown and a 21-6 lead. Kaser was hurt but later returned.
Robert Gauthier Los Angeles Times CORY LITTLETON blocks the punt of the Chargers’ Drew Kaser in the end zone, where Blake Countess recovered the ball for a second-quarter touchdown and a 21-6 lead. Kaser was hurt but later returned.

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